to be fair it all depends on the size of the aircraft.
a Hercules could but it is slightly smaller than your average civil aircraft.
i would suppose so yes.
yes its possible
The aircraft carrier was preceded by the balloon barges of the US Civil War, and the first aircraft carriers were seaplane tenders that did not launch or recover planes aboard the ship. This included the French "Foudre" in 1911. The HMS Ark Royal (1914) was a seaplane carrier that experimented with shipboard launches and recovery. The first US carrier was a converted coal ship, the Jupiter, which became USS Langley in 1920. The first aircraft carrier designed with a flight deck was the Japanese carrier "Hosho" (1922), followed by the commissioning of the British carrier HMS Hermes in 1924.
yes we can keep a civil and military aircraft be kept in space
Military aircraft is an aircraft which has been adapted for the military uses like- Bombing, Air strikes, Combat missions, Soldiers ammunition and transportations, etc. Civil aircraft only provide transport for cargo and passengers.
Military aircraft are designed to destroy the enemy's military aircraft and (sometimes) their civil aircraft. They also preform bombing tasks as well as a few non-combat tasks. Civil aircraft are mainly transports and crop sprayers that don't do much fighting. Military aircraft are designed to fulfill a multitude of roles that are specified by the Armed forces that will be using these aircraft. These roles include Air attack as well as air support and defence of other military assets. Transport and surveillence are also key roles that military aircraft fulfill. Civil aircraft are designed to perform commercial transport as well as personal use and sports roles. Civil aircraft have no need for stealth or combat survivability the way military Military aircraft do.
military aircraft are used for military purposes i.e combat, military cargo, extraction of troops and etc.. civil aircraft are ones use for commercial airlines for example. British airways and Qantas.
J. Bryan has written: 'Hodgepodge two' -- subject(s): Commonplace-books 'The sword over the mantel' -- subject(s): Confederate Personal narratives, History, Humor, United States Civil War, 1861-1865, World War, 1939-1945 'Hodgepodge' -- subject(s): Commonplace-books 'Aircraft carrier' -- subject(s): American Aerial operations, American Personal narratives, World War, 1939-1945, Yorktown (Aircraft carrier, CV-10) 'Mission beyond darkness' -- subject(s): American Aerial operations, Lexington (Aircraft carrier : 1943- ), World War, 1939-1945
An aircraft registration is a unique alphanumeric string that identifies a civil aircraft, in similar fashion to a licence plate on an automobile.
AMC Form 8, Civil Aircraft Certificate
Stage II aircraft should actually be referred to as Chapter II aircraft in relation the noise certification standards contained in Chapter II of Annex 16 Environmental Protection, Volume I- Aircraft Noise to the Convention on International Civil Aviation as adopted by the Council of ICAO (International Civil Aviation Organisation) Examples include un-modified DC9 and Boeing 727 aircraft
i am engineer but i will give it not possible civil aviation requirement is approved by the dgca and ame means the aircraft maintenance engineer and it is have more paper in the completation and it gives the more results in the aircraft field at the ground level as you mean original is the dgca approved is the main and rao,srao is the role player in the fully achieve as we seen the good or bad in the maintenance side that is comes in the posibility
Wow, where to begin?? Civil aircraft: there are over 200 civil aircraft manufacturers. The major ones being Boering, Airbus, Bombardier, Tupolev, Cessna and Saab just to name a few. There are also many many military aircraft including: DeHavilland, Airbus and Boeing. For more information, search in http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_aircraft_manufacturers
Currently, the newest civil aircraft is the Airbus A380. (For more info on the A380, search for comparison between A300 and A380.)